"Illuminating the archetypal patterns of feminine oppression and encouraging authentic expressions of women's identities through a deep integration of the analytic and the artistic."

COMING SOON​ from Seeing Red!

The Epoch MakersArchetypal Patterns of Creative Women Who Influenced Their World

"In our most private and most subjective lives, we are not only the passive witnesses of our age and its sufferers, but also its makers. We make our own epoch." ​(Carl Jung, 1934 - Matter of Heart)

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What Women Are Saying About the ​Seeing Red Certificate Course:

Immersing myself in Seeing Red brought me to the center point of authenticity that only peeling back the layers of who we are can bring. The lectures and presenters, the insight from others, the awareness, the navigation of complexes, complications, loss, fierce love and even more fierce self reflection surrounded by a collective of others who are taking the seeing red deep dive, allowed me to inch closer to a developmental edge of motherhood, sisterhood, womanhood. –Gloria Crist

New aspects of psyche are being revealed through this course in deeply meaningful ways, through a process of deep engagement…the creative residency being a culmination point of sorts that has prompted new awareness and exposed areas of further inquiry. This course is proving to be​transformative on every level.​–Adrienne Jenkins​

Every movie, every Thursday presentation, every book reminds me that I came to the planet on a mission! ​- Pearl Gregor​

This module was amazing in that we could connect so intimately through a website format. ​And that I could speak up and did.–Nancie Hines​

"It is time for a new archetypal reality to be birthed into consciousness, a reality that no longer situates femininity and power as dualities."- Loralee Scott-Conforti, MFASeeing Red Founder and Director

* It is estimated that 35 per cent of women worldwide have experienced either physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or sexual violence by a non-partner at some point in their lives. However, some national studies show that up to 70 per cent of women have experienced physical and/or sexual violence from an intimate partner in their lifetime

* Forty-three per cent of women in the 28 European Union Member States have experienced some form of psychological violence by an intimate partner in their lifetime [3].

* It is estimated that of all women who were the victims of homicide globally in 2012, almost half were killed by intimate partners or family members, compared to less than six per cent of men killed in the same year [4].

* Worldwide, almost 750 million women and girls alive today were married before their 18th birthday. Child marriage is more common in West and Central Africa, where over 4 in 10 girls were married before age 18, and about 1 in 7 were married or in union before age 15.

* Around 120 million girls worldwide (slightly more than 1 in 10) have experienced forced intercourse or other forced sexual acts at some point in their lives. By far the most common perpetrators of sexual violence against girls are current or former husbands, partners or boyfriends [7].

* At least 200 million women and girls alive today have undergone female genital mutilation in the 30 countries with representative data on prevalence. In most of these countries, the majority of girls were cut before age 5.

* Adult women account for 51 per cent of all human trafficking victims detected globally. Women and girls together account for 71 per cent, with girls representing nearly three out of every four child trafficking victims. Nearly three out of every four trafficked women and girls are trafficked for the purpose of sexual exploitation [9].

* The extent and forms of school-related violence that girls and boys experience differ, but evidence suggests that girls are at greater risk of sexual violence, harassment and exploitation. In addition to the resulting adverse psychological, sexual and reproductive health consequences, school-related gender-based violence is a major obstacle to universal schooling and the right to education for girls [11].

* Twenty-three per cent of female undergraduate university students reported having experienced sexual assault or sexual misconduct in a survey across 27 universities in the United States in 2015. Rates of reporting to campus officials, law enforcement or others ranged from 5 to 28 per cent, depending on the specific type of behavior [12]

* Eighty-two per cent of women parliamentarians who participated in a study conducted by the Inter-parliamentary Union in 39 countries across 5 regions reported having experienced some form of psychological violence while serving their terms. Psychological violence was defined as remarks, gestures and images of a sexist or humiliating sexual nature made against them or threats and/or mobbing to which they might have been subjected. They cited social media as the main channel through which such psychological violence is perpetrated; nearly half of those surveyed (44 per cent) reported having received death, rape, assault or abduction threats towards them or their families [13].